I’ve got a 1995 Chaparral 1930SS with a 5.0L V8 Mercruiser engine. Specifically it’s a 350 Mag Alpha/Bravo.
Went to start it up this spring and before I could, a continuous alarm sounds in the ignition on (run) position. Never actually tried to start it. Based on my research and calling Mercury Marine, this can only be a few things.
1. Low oil pressure, which will only go off continuously if the engine is running and meets a few other parameters if I’m correct. This makes me think even if the sensor is bad, the engine has to meet those parameters before it can sound the alarm.
2. Excessive water temps; haven’t started it so obviously it’s not overheating but it could still be the sender/switch being faulty.
3. Lastly it could be low stern drive oil level or bad oil level sensor.
Let me know if I missed anything but this is what I was told by Mercury Marine.
So for the temperature sensor sender and temperature switch, I unplugged the wires for both, turned the key, alarm continued to sound. This is the correct way to test right? The switch doesn’t make continuity to ground until engine temp is above the overheat threshold?
I have checked the gear oil reservoir level and it is full. I’ve heard the float can stick but it’s in a tough to reach location so moving a pencil around in the reservoir made no difference. I cannot remove it unless I cut the oil level sensor wires either. Can I cut one of its wires to see if that fixes the alarm as that would prevent any continuity to ground?
Will low battery voltage sound a continuous alarm before startup? It does have a two battery system.
Went to start it up this spring and before I could, a continuous alarm sounds in the ignition on (run) position. Never actually tried to start it. Based on my research and calling Mercury Marine, this can only be a few things.
1. Low oil pressure, which will only go off continuously if the engine is running and meets a few other parameters if I’m correct. This makes me think even if the sensor is bad, the engine has to meet those parameters before it can sound the alarm.
2. Excessive water temps; haven’t started it so obviously it’s not overheating but it could still be the sender/switch being faulty.
3. Lastly it could be low stern drive oil level or bad oil level sensor.
Let me know if I missed anything but this is what I was told by Mercury Marine.
So for the temperature sensor sender and temperature switch, I unplugged the wires for both, turned the key, alarm continued to sound. This is the correct way to test right? The switch doesn’t make continuity to ground until engine temp is above the overheat threshold?
I have checked the gear oil reservoir level and it is full. I’ve heard the float can stick but it’s in a tough to reach location so moving a pencil around in the reservoir made no difference. I cannot remove it unless I cut the oil level sensor wires either. Can I cut one of its wires to see if that fixes the alarm as that would prevent any continuity to ground?
Will low battery voltage sound a continuous alarm before startup? It does have a two battery system.

